Helpful Resource for Avoiding Goods Produced by Child and Forced Labor

“Recent years have seen increased concern about the stewardship of natural resources, ethical treatment of animals, and ensuring that farmers receive fair prices for their work. As a result, certifications and labels exist to inform customers whether seafood is sustainably caught, livestock is pasture-fed, chickens are free range, coffee beans are “fair trade,” diamonds are conflict-free, I can go on and on. And yet those “seals-of-approval” while fostering increased transparency and driving consumers to reward companies that engage in good corporate citizenship, they all seem to assume that the hands that pull the net, that the hands that pick the crops are not enslaved. We know that assumption is non-operative.”

“We know that assumption is non-operative.” We hear about human trafficking at home and across the world, yet, according to Ambassador CdeBaca, we consumers have few ways of knowing what goods are and aren’t produced using child labor and forced (slave) labor.

At the same time, we can raise awareness, starting first with our own. This chart on the Department of Labor website lists goods produced by child labor and forced labor, by product and by country:

I sorted the list by goods produced (click the arrow to the right of “Good”).

Given this list, it’s no surprise that the website Slavery Footprint estimates that I unknowingly have 43 slaves working for me. Forty-three!

I had to check out the banana companies right away. Casa Ortiz goes through a lot of bananas in the course of a week. Chiquita and Dole both had statements on their sites regarding human trafficking; I could not find anything for Del Monte. Of course, there’s no knowing how well these companies follow through on their corporate policies at the ground level, and the problem still exists. But at least they claim to be doing something about it.

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